"Passport-To-Pimlico"
So you identify yourself as being a passport (or port pass)? A tool to enslave the ignorant travelers..
Also, since when do parts of cities require a passport?
Why would you write an article ("to") with capital first letter?
"I agree that in the later episodes those once funny jokes did become a little tiresome, but series four is better than two. Third is still King, with the original series as the second best."
What a convoluted and overly-compelx way to express your insult to truth.
So in YOU opinion (which no rational human will agree with), the order goes like this:
- Third
- First
- Fourth
- Second
Is this right? Why did you have to say it in such a way, and not in a simple and coherent manner?
Also, the reality is that the ACTUAL order, best to worst, is:
- Fourth (Just GENIUS and flows the best)
- Third (Kinda good, but a little 'meh' compared to the fourth)
- Second (A bit stuffy and annnoying, plus it has too many disgusting elements)
- First (This is just downright boring and problematic)
The first is really problematic, as it doesn't flow well at all, it's visuals look somehow wrong (maybe because they are not perfected in a studio, but filmed on location, with overly bright lights), it has been filmed in the winter, so it's bleak and depressing, and the feel of the show is oddly awful for an early eighties show.
The rest are brighter, easier to digest (and I mean as far as atmosphere and unnecessary visual/action clutter goes), have tighter editing, better flow, better humor, better actors (come on, Brian Blessed is ok, but he is too over-the-top to be taken 'seriously' (whatever that means in a comedy), and you don't even expect him to do anything but shout and murder and pillage - he's just a bad, cartoonish caricature, whereas Stephen Fry has calm moments, and is a very good example of a slightly mad, stubborn and incompetent commander. And yet he has his shouting moments - Brian Blessed almost has nothing else - and think about all the other actors, especially Rik Mayall, and the always brilliant Hugh Laurie. There's a balance between 'cartoonish' and 'realistic', that make certain situations feel very serious and intense, that's missing in the first series)
How can anyone even entertain the idea that the Fourth is not the best? I am often amazed that the lengths that the odd denizens of this curious planet go to, and the depths that they stoop to, but that someone is seriously suggesting this.. madness, I tell ya.
"It's the silly Python-esque humour blended with the Atkinson/Curtis take on Richard III and historical truths of the era that make it so great."
Nothing Python-esque about it. Just wannabe-maybe. It's not good humor, and you'd have to really know specific points about certain historical events to even see any humor in a lot of the stuff in the first one. You don't need as much pre-knowledge for the other ones, because they are better written. It's like if understanding a movie would require you to read some specific book, first. It would be bad writing.
Nothing to praise about bad writing, you know. Historical 'truths' (whatever that means - historians can make up their own truths, because no one ever double checks their 'facts', except other historians - frankly, if you weren't there, or able to esoterically know it, you can't call it a truth. Just an accepted claim, perhaps. Have you no idea how many things historians have actually gotten wrong, and how much of it is just pure guesswork and conclusions based on very flimsy evidence (so the conclusions may be wrong)? Just research the historians' claims about Egypt and then read some interesting facts that counteract those claims, like the book 'The Orion Mystery', for example)) do not make any humor or anything else 'great'.
How could they? No, it's good writing that makes a comedy show great. And the first series does not have good writing (for the most part). It's very sloppy, amateurish, like a badly written play that has its small moments, but not that many of them. And too many bad moments inbetween.
The jokes in the first series are either cliché, unfunny, predictable from a mile away, or over-used stuff that people stopped laughing at in the 1400s.
"Plus the aray of bloody fine actors and performers putting in appearences"
You don't start a sentence with 'plus'.
The word 'array' has two 'R's in it.
The word 'appearances' is written with an 'a', instead of 'e', like you did.
And what 'bloody' fine actors? Are they bloody? Well, the king is made to look quite bloody in some scenes, because he's dead, but other than that, I don't know why you would want to put that horrible word to describe something good.
Those actors may be 'fine', but that's not enough compared to the absolute BRILLIANT actors in the other serieses, like Stephen Fry and Hugh Laurie, for example.
And what's so special about 'putting in appearances' (whatever that means)?
Doesn't every actor, bad or good, 'appear' in whatever they are in?
" - Brian Blessed, the amazing Peter Cook and the second best ever guest appearence in any sitcom anywhere, ever - Frank Finlay as The Witchsmeller Pursuivant. ""
You again misspelled 'appearance', you wrote 'ever' twice (redundant), and failed to produce any evidence as to why that would be the best 'appearence' (sic) 'second best ever..in any sitcom anywhere, ever'.
You also didn't tell us what you think the absolute best 'appearence' (sic) is.
I have nothing against the actors you mentioned, but they are very over-the-top here, and could have been replaced by a 'vast aray' (sic) of actors, that would've been just as good in those cartoon roles.
And they can't be compared to the brilliance of the actors in the later serieses.
Your post has so much wrong, it could still be dug more, but I think I am not in the mood to stand in the dung heap all day.
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